Median 1BR rent is about 20.36% of gross income in Providence. In the monthly breakdown, Rent (housing) is the biggest lever for overall costs. In this area (mid-range), the model’s rent math puts housing in a “Comfortable” bucket: rent looks comparatively manageable and rent (housing) is the main lever in the estimates.
Median rent (1BR)
$1,133/mo
Cost of living index
105.8 (U.S. = 100)
Rent cap @ 30%
$1,669/mo
Salary for the 30% rule
$45,320/yr
Cost-of-living tier: moderate
What drives the budget here?
This area is generally mid-range based on a cost-of-living index of 105.8 (U.S. average = 100). Typical rent-to-gross is in the Comfortable range (using the page’s rent and income inputs).
In the site’s estimated monthly breakdown, the largest category is Rent (housing) (1,266.5/mo), so that’s the biggest lever for moving the overall budget up or down.
Practical next steps
Rent looks comparatively manageable for the typical household. Your biggest wins usually come from planning for the non-housing categories (utilities, groceries, etc.) so totals stay predictable.
In this area, the modeled rent target is reachable at (or below) the local median income level.
For a median-priced home (), estimated principal and interest is about . This is an estimate; actual rates and terms vary.
Rent vs Buy in Providence
Rent (1BR average)
$1,133 / month
Buy (median home)
$1,718.08 / month
Mortgage estimate (P&I). Based on:
Median home price: $322,800
20% down
30-year mortgage
7% estimated APR
Is Providence Affordable in 2026?
At the median household income of a one-bedroom at represents about of pre-tax income. The common affordability guideline suggests housing at or below of income; Providence sits within that range for the typical household.
A two-bedroom at is roughly 25% of median household income. Households at the median can typically afford the average two-bedroom while staying within the 30% rule.
State income tax in Rhode Island runs at 5.. Take-home pay is lower than in no-income-tax states for the same gross salary. When comparing affordability across states, net pay matters more than gross.
The cost-of-living index of 105.8 (U.S. = 100) places Providence near the national average. Housing and living costs are in the middle range compared with other U.S. cities.
Updated March 2026
Data source: U.S. Census ACS (place-level)
Can you afford this city?
Quick check using the 30% rule: rent should not exceed 30% of gross income.
Use the calculator below to test your salary against Providence's housing costs.
Salary After Tax Calculator
Simplified estimate. Federal brackets and FICA only; no deductions modeled.
Estimated federal tax$10,453.00
Estimated state tax$4,193.00
Estimated FICA (7.65%)$5,355.00
Net annual income$49,999.00
Net monthly income$4,166.58
Effective tax rate28.6%
Rent Affordability Calculator
Rule of thumb: keep rent at 25–30% of gross income.
Rent-to-income30.0%
Affordable range (25–30%)$1,250 – $1,500/mo
Is $X Enough in Providence?
Data-driven estimates using this city's rent and tax figures.
Is $50k Enough in Providence?
Moderate
A salary in Providence leaves about after federal, state, and FICA. A one-bedroom at is of gross income. After rent you'd have roughly for other expenses; our estimated monthly total is about . That makes k tight unless you keep rent at or below the 25–30% range (–). The median household in Providence earns about so at k you'd be below that.
Is $70k Enough in Providence?
Comfortable
At take-home in Providence is roughly (single). The average one-bedroom () is of gross—within the guideline. Estimated total monthly costs are ~. k is typically workable for a single person in a one-bedroom here, with some room for savings if you keep discretionary spending in check. You'd be above the median household income in Providence ().
Is $100k Enough in Providence?
Comfortable
With in Providence, net monthly is about . A two-bedroom at is of gross. The affordable rent range at 25– is –, so you can comfortably afford the average one- or two-bedroom. Estimated total monthly outlay is ~. k generally allows a solid standard of living here, with room for savings and discretionary spending. The median household income in Providence is so you'd be well above that.
Is $150k Enough in Providence?
Comfortable
At in Providence, take-home is roughly . The city's median household income is about so you'd be well above the typical household. Average two-bedroom rent () is 11% of your gross. You can afford above-average housing, higher savings, and still cover our estimated monthly total (~) with room to spare.
Estimated Monthly Cost Breakdown
Rent (avg 1BR/2BR)
$1,266.5
Utilities
$190.44
Groceries
$444.36
Transportation
$402.04
Healthcare
$338.56
Misc
$370.3
Total estimated
$3,012.2
About Cost of Living in Providence
In Providence, the cost-of-living index is 105.8 (national average 100), placing the city in the medium range—neither the most nor the least expensive. State income tax in Rhode Island runs at 5., and combined sales tax is around . Median household income here is about and median individual income around . A one-bedroom at is roughly 20% of that household income—within the 30% affordability rule of thumb. Rent levels run approximately for a one-bedroom and for a two-bedroom; the median home price is about . When planning a move or a budget, these figures—including 5. state income tax and sales tax—should be combined with your own salary and spending to gauge affordability. Income and rent inputs are based on ACS place-level estimates. Compare with other Rhode Island cities.
The cost-of-living index for Providence is 105.8 (U.S. average = 100). That places it near the national average. Median household income is and a one-bedroom rents for about .
Using the housing guideline, a single person in a one-bedroom at would need roughly k gross annually. "Comfortable" depends on your spending; this covers housing at the guideline.
At median household income of a one-bedroom at is about of pre-tax income. The common guideline is or less; the typical household is within that range.
State income tax in Rhode Island is 5.. Combined with federal and FICA taxes, take-home is lower than in no-income-tax states for the same gross salary.
Providence has a higher cost-of-living index (105.8 vs 100). One-bedroom rent is higher ( vs ).
At k, a one-bedroom at is about of gross income. That fits the housing guideline; many single earners can make it work.
Median household income in Providence is . k is above that. At k, a one-bedroom is about 14% of gross.
Rent in Providence is relatively low relative to local income. At median household income of a 1BR at is about of pre-tax income ( or less is often considered affordable).
For a one-bedroom at , an income of about k annually keeps rent at or below of gross. Comfort varies by household size and other expenses.
Data Sources
ACS 2023IRS 2026Updated Mar 2026
Median income, median rent, median home value, population: U.S. Census ACS (2023 5-year estimates)
Cost of living index and monthly breakdown: estimated model
State and sales tax rates: curated state-level tables (not from Census)
Income and housing figures on this page are estimates for informational use. They are not official census or tax records. Median household and individual income, average rents, and median home price are derived from regional benchmarks and may not reflect the latest year or every neighborhood.
Tax rates reflect state-level averages. State income tax is a single rate for illustration; actual liability depends on brackets, deductions, and filing status. Sales tax can vary by county and city within a state.
The monthly cost breakdown (rent, utilities, groceries, transportation, healthcare, misc) uses this city's average rent plus non-housing categories scaled by the cost-of-living index. It is a rough budget guide, not a personal expense audit.
The data quality field shown in the financial snapshot above (e.g. "estimated") indicates how the figures were produced. Always verify with official sources (Census, BLS, state revenue departments) before making financial decisions.
This content is educational and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice.